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As the COVID-19 outbreak spreads across India it’s unfolding a series of events that inevitably have been due to a trickle-down effect caused by the global pandemic.
One of the sectors that it has affected majorly is the smartphone industry. India, which is a hotbed for smartphone manufacturing and also a key market, has taken a blow amid the lockdown across 80 cities in the country.
Yesterday, the Indian government ordered a lockdown in 80 major Indian cities which also means that mobile manufacturing facilities in these areas will also have to be shut down.
Speaking to some of the smartphone makers in India, they said they are conforming with the lockdown protocols and have ceased operations in their respective plants.
Speaking to Xiaomi, the company spokesperson said that it works with contract manufacturers so the onus relies completely on its partners.
However, the company head Manu Kumar Jain, in an open letter to the Xiaomi community talked about some of the measures it’s taking to curb the spread including abiding by the lockdown orders.
Despite the halt in production, smartphone makers like Samsung, Nokia and Xiaomi are being bullish and still launching devices in India (online only) with the hope that people will buy them.
Where Samsung launched its M21 smartphone last week with the sale starting today at 12 PM, the Xiaomi K30 Pro is expected to be launched on 24 March. Also, Nokia recently launched the Nokia 5310 and Nokia 8.3 which is its first 5G device.
According to a report from Strategy Analytics, global smartphone shipments in February tumbled a staggering 38 percent which is a record.
With physical stores shut and more people quarantined at home, there is a possibility that the numbers in March are going to drop further.
What’s the biggest irony of all is that this is happening at a time when the government has approved a Rs 48,000 crore plan to boost electronics manufacturing and woo large investment into the country.
This is primarily to boost exports from India which is currently the second-largest smartphone manufacturing hub in the world. In hindsight, this pandemic is going to be a major setback to these plans.
There’s no doubt that the coronavirus pandemic is going to force the hand of many smartphone makers into restructuring their production and marketing tactics for the days to come. What waits to be seen is how bad the situation gets from here on.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)